Trump Claims Russia-Ukraine Peace Deal 'Very Close', but Europeans ...
Six Democratic lawmakers urged military personnel to reject unlawful orders in a viral video, prompting a Pentagon review, FBI investigation, and bomb threats against the lawmakers.
- On November 18, six Democratic members of Congress released a 90-second video urging active-duty service members and government intelligence professionals to refuse illegal orders, prompting President Donald Trump to call the lawmakers' actions `seditious` and `punishable by death` on Truth Social.
- Lawmakers said they aimed to start a conversation about the president's dangerous rhetoric and threats to use the military unlawfully, addressing active-duty personnel and government intelligence professionals while Senator Elissa Slotkin said she was not aware of any current illegal orders.
- On Monday, the Pentagon announced it was reviewing `serious allegations of misconduct` related to Senator Mark Kelly , while the FBI said on Tuesday it would investigate the six Democratic lawmakers, and several reported bomb threats.
- The president wrote that `Each one of these traitors... should be ARRESTED AND PUT ON TRIAL`, and Santa Barbara's House Representative Salud Carbajal condemned the message, emphasizing servicemembers' oath to the Constitution.
- The clash coincided with rising tensions involving Venezuela as the U.S. military deployed its largest aircraft carrier and carried out 20 strikes killing at least 80 people, which United Nations experts called extrajudicial executions.
13 Articles
13 Articles
DiGenova, Toensing to Newsmax: ‘Seditious Six’ Video ‘Outrageous’
The lawmakers dubbed the "Seditious Six" had no authority to urge U.S. service members to ignore "illegal" orders from President Donald Trump in a video posted on social media, former U.S. Attorney for Washington, D.C., Joe diGenova, and former senior Justice Department official Victoria Toensing said Tuesday.The Newsmax legal analysts told Newsmax's "The Chris Salcedo Show" that the lawmakers' video crossed a bright legal and constitutional lin…
DiGenova, Toensing to Newsmax: ‘Seditious Six’ Video ‘Outrageous’
The lawmakers dubbed the "Seditious Six" had no authority to urge U.S. service members to ignore "illegal" orders from President Donald Trump in a video posted on social media, former U.S. Attorney for Washington, D.C., Joe diGenova, and former senior Justice Department official Victoria Toensing said Tuesday.The Newsmax legal analysts told Newsmax's "The Chris Salcedo Show" that the lawmakers' video crossed a bright legal and constitutional lin…
DiGenova, Toensing to Newsmax: ‘Seditious Six’ Video ‘Outrageous’
The lawmakers dubbed the "Seditious Six" had no authority to urge U.S. service members to ignore "illegal" orders from President Donald Trump in a video posted on social media, former U.S. Attorney for Washington, D.C., Joe diGenova, and former senior Justice Department official Victoria Toensing said Tuesday.The Newsmax legal analysts told Newsmax's "The Chris Salcedo Show" that the lawmakers' video crossed a bright legal and constitutional lin…
DiGenova, Toensing to Newsmax: ‘Seditious Six’ Video ‘Outrageous’
The lawmakers dubbed the "Seditious Six" had no authority to urge U.S. service members to ignore "illegal" orders from President Donald Trump in a video posted on social media, former U.S. Attorney for Washington, D.C., Joe diGenova, and former senior Justice Department official Victoria Toensing said Tuesday.The Newsmax legal analysts told Newsmax's "The Chris Salcedo Show" that the lawmakers' video crossed a bright legal and constitutional lin…
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